How To Date - Taking it to the next level
Episode Date: March 10, 2025Things are going well… So Elizabeth and Mel are taking it to the next level where they are getting just that little bit more serious. In this episode, Mel and Elizabeth look at exclusivity and co...mmitment and what it takes to build a strong foundation for a lasting relationship. Plus: how a partner’s past plays into your future together. After you’ve listened, you can get all the resources and worksheets discussed at www.thepodclass.co.uk Mel and Elizabeth are on a mission to revolutionise the world of dating! We want to make it a safe, fun and rewarding experience for everyone. If you’d like to join us, we’ve put together our very own How To Date Good Dating Pledge, consisting of 10 simple ‘Dating Commandments’. Have a look and sign up for free now at www.thepodclass.co.uk If you don’t want to wait each week for new episodes join our wonderful community of subscribers where you can binge all episodes now, ad free, all at once. Follow the link to sign up: https://howtofail.supportingcast.fm/ A Daylight and Sony Music Entertainment Production. _______________________________________________________________________ Morrisons terms & conditions More Card T&C’s: https://www.morrisons.com/more/terms-and-conditions/ General T&C’s https://groceries.morrisons.com/content/terms-and-conditions?srsltid=AfmBOor2xSfFNVtu22I9z5plcQkO6kId8jZ3NSdAF4X4Mt8JQkhO_ylQ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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There you are, pushing your newborn baby in a stroller through the park.
The first time out of the house in weeks.
You have your Starbucks, venty, because, you know, sleep deprivation.
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Welcome to How to Date, the podcast that teaches you what you need to know about navigating modern romance.
I'm podcaster and author Elizabeth Day.
And I'm Mel Schilling, Relationship Coach.
And every week, we aim to give you the skills you need to show up as yourself on the apps and in real life.
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Hello, my darling Mel. Hello, gorgeous. So we are six episodes in. Wow. Are we ready to
take it to the next level? There's the question. I'm certainly ready to take it to the next level
with you. Well, thank you. What a relief. It has been such a
journey of discovery so far. I've really loved it. I've loved talking to you. I've loved talking
to our guests. Last week we had the amazing la la la let me explain talking about red and green
flags and boy we've had a few of those. Oh yes. Oh yes. Yes. But now we're at the stage where
it's green flags all the way and we have decided that we are ready to take it to the next level
in what we hope to become a serious relationship. Right.
So Mel, do you think there is ever a hard and fast rule when it comes to timeframes as to discerning when it's appropriate to take it to the next level?
I would say definitely not a hard and fast rule, but I think you need to be very, very clear yourself about what that transition looks like between the situation ship or we're just casually dating through to we're in a serious relationship.
I think so many couples muddle their way through this transition in a really clunky way
and end up in this place where they're starting out a relationship
and they're not on an even keel.
And I think it's so important to give yourself the gift of a really smart, clear conversation
about the next stage of the relationship if you want to have a positive relationship.
Yeah, I relate to so much of that.
And I think what was happening is that I would kiss,
someone or go on a date with someone and then think, well, they seem nice enough. So obviously
this is going to end up being a relationship. And actually it doesn't need to be. And I think
that if I look back at myself in my 20s, potentially there was part of me that was still conditioned
to people please where I thought, well, if this person wants to date me long term, then I should
say yes. And then another part of me probably was comparing myself to my peers and feeling
like, well, I want to have this because my friends have it, or I'm of an age now where I really
should have it because TikTok time is running out. And if I want to have children in my 30s,
I've got to get the relationship in place in my 20s. And so all of that was going on in my head.
What wasn't going on was the question, what do I want? And also, who am I? I don't think I took the time
to understand who I was.
And I think absolutely who am I is very important.
But I think when we're talking about this topic, this taking it to the next stage,
what do I want, I think is an even more important question.
Because so often, like you've described there, we just respond to other people's needs
and all the shoulds that rain down on us from our families, from the media, from Hollywood,
from rom-coms, you know, the shoulds.
Therefore, if the music stops and there's someone standing in front of me, then that's the person I'm going to enter into a relationship with.
But I'd love for our listeners to start thinking of that early phase of the relationship where you're, you know, I like to think of it like dogs.
You know how dogs sniff each other's bums?
I mean, that's what we do.
Love where this is going.
Okay.
So you're advising our listeners just to sniff each other's bombs.
Absolutely.
Okay, fine.
Yes.
Yes, metaphorically speaking, or physically.
speaking. No judgment here. Absolutely no kink shaming whatsoever. I love the way dogs do that. And I think
that's what new couples do as well, is they're sussing each other out. And I think it's really
important that as an individual in a new relationship, you keep coming back to, does it fit me?
I'm assessing this potential partner to see if they are going to work for me in my life. Not so
much whether I measure up for them, that's their business. Wow. Because we can get so caught up on
that. That's so true. And actually, again, I really relate to that in a negative sense in that I would
never have thought of it that way around. I would always have thought of it as if I am not right for them,
there's some failing in me that I need to address. So let me attempt to shape shift. I should say
to our lovely listeners that there's no guest on this episode because men and I were too greedy and
wanted to look at this topic all on our own because it is such an important one. And I think
it's particularly interesting because of our joint experiences in dating, because when we met
on our husbands, we were both 39. Yeah, that's right. And at that stage for a cis hetero woman,
the idea of time frame comes with this added edge, which is if you do want to have a family,
then you have to factor that in as well.
So for any listeners who are in that position,
what advice would you give them
that they don't rush things that aren't right for them?
It's a really complex area
and I find it hard to give hard and fast advice about this.
When I started my dating coaching practice,
almost exclusively,
this was the pool of clientele that I was working with.
It was women in their mid to late 30s who were starting to feel that urgency.
But I think if that woman can keep coming back to what do I need and try not to be swayed
by other people's expectations, whether that's this prospective partner or previous
partners or family or society at large, you know, to come back to what is it that I need.
and is this the right partner, if it is that, you know, you're knocking on the door of
parenthood, is this the right partner?
Is this the person I want to co-parent children with?
And, you know, it may not be that that's the person that you're in a relationship at the
moment with.
And that could be a really hard question to ask yourself.
You know, maybe I've invested six months in this new relationship with this person.
there's something niggling away deep inside me.
There's a little fear in there.
And if I listen to it, I realize that I probably couldn't see myself parenting with this person.
And being a parent is one of the most important things to me right now.
Then I've got to make a really hard decision.
And that's hard, of course, because we have the whole sunk cost fallacy, you know.
And it's such an investment of your time.
Your time's so precious, particularly in your late 30s.
It's a hard decision, but it's an important decision to make.
It is.
And I would like to add to that that there are so many things that you can do to mitigate risk.
We are so fortunate that we live in a world where scientific advances have meant that the biological age for parenting, it can be advanced.
You do have longer than used to have.
There are many different ways to parent.
I went through a round of egg freezing in my late 30s.
I wanted to have that assurance. I would say though that sometimes that assurance can be
a mythical one in that I didn't get that many eggs. It was, you know, on one level it's great
to have these things at our disposal. On another, it shouldn't detract from your ultimate focus,
which as you say, in this particular example that we're talking about, is about finding
someone that you feel comfortable building a family unit with. Absolutely. And of course,
on the same topic, but from a different perspective, I had a different experience. And of course,
we were the same age, you and I going into these relationships. And I didn't have the burning
desire to be a mother like you did. It came later, and it wasn't until I was 42, that, you know,
I ended up going down that path and going through IVF and ultimately having Maddie when I was 42.
So I guess just as a message to our listeners there that there are so many different paths that we can take to motherhood through fertility, I guess what this brings up is that it is so deeply important to people, men, women and everyone in between, you know, to actually take a moment to reflect on, if I'm in my mid to late 30s, is parenthood something that I want to be a part of my next decade?
And if it is, what do I do about that?
And it might feel a little like we're getting off topic,
but I don't think we are because this is one of those incredibly critical decision points
that enter into the discussion, isn't it?
Definitely.
When you're deciding, is this the right relationship?
And it's one of the things I get asked about the most.
So I'm glad that we've had this discussion in our introductory chat.
And now we're going to move on because, as you know, we love a three-part structure here on how to date.
We're moving on to three aspects of taking it to the next level.
The first one is getting serious.
The second one is compatibility.
And the third is their past and your future.
So let's start on part one, which is getting serious.
We've already talked a little bit about timeframe when you decide to take it to the next stage.
step. But I'm also interested in when you decide to quit. Yes. And that's a sunken cost
fallacy that we touched on. Yes. What are some of the things that you think listeners should be
looking for in terms of making the decision either way? Okay. A couple of things to acknowledge
here. One is that it's very common for partners to move at a different pace, particularly in that
early phase. And this is a really good thing to be aware of because it can lead to so much
awkwardness if you're not self-aware and socially aware. So what you need to be doing in that
first period, you know, it might be three months, it might be six months, might be a week,
depending on how you move. But if we call it that phase one of the relationship where things
are still ill-defined, you know, maybe you're not exclusive, maybe you haven't even talked about
whether you're exclusive or not, things are still unsaid.
You're just sniffing each other's bombs.
During this time, one partner may be moving toward that goalpost of the chat much more
quickly than the other.
So you might be in a position where you're the one pacing really fast or you might be
the one lagging behind.
I think it's really helpful to call that out.
And, you know, you can use humour in these kind of conversations.
I'm a huge one for bringing humor into awkward conversations and actually calling it out for what it is.
You know, something I used to do when I was internet dating was one of the first things I'd do when I'd sit down with my date was say, isn't this hilarious?
We've just met online and now we're meeting for the first time.
I'm nervous.
Are you nervous?
And it would just break the eyes and we'd both laugh at the thing, you know?
The situation that we're both in that we've put ourselves in and isn't it all?
awkward, ha ha, ice is broken. Let's have a drink. You can bring that into this as well as you're
leading up to the chat, and I put that in capital letters, FYI, is calling out the awkwardness or
the lack of, what would you call it? Is synchronicity?
Synchronicity, perfect. That's the perfect word. Because if one person arrives there before the
other, and they don't realize that the other person isn't there yet, and they try to have
the chat, it can be overwhelming for the other person. You really need to read the room
here. And a good way to do that is by dropping out little hints or little pebbles to see
how the person responds. So let's say you are the person who's moving a little bit more quickly
than your partner. I feel like you're directly staring into my soul. I feel
personally attacks and you're completely bang on.
We'll get on to that in a second.
Let's say, hypothetically, let's say your names, I don't know, Liz.
Yes.
And you're really wanting to have the chat.
What could you do?
What little questions could you ask or what pebbles could you throw?
So this is where I think it's good to go back to something we talked about in relation to the first date,
which was those open-ended questions.
So this is not putting your partner on the spot or, you know, trying to tie them down to something really, really confronting.
But exploring things together.
This is tapping into your curiosity again.
So you might ask a question like, you know, when you think about us in a couple of years, what does it look like?
Love that.
Is there even an us?
Do they cringe when you say the word us?
I mean, that would be very telling in itself.
Be a bit awkward.
but very telling.
So I guess this is about dipping your toe in the water.
And, you know, I sort of, when it comes to building confidence in different areas of life,
I often talk about expanding the comfort zone rather than jumping out of it.
You know, I don't really believe about jumping out of your comfort zone into that anxiety zone.
I don't think it achieves much.
So what if you were to just expand the comfort zone by asking some of those open questions to just start
gently gathering information about their perspective.
And this is all about mitigating risk, really, ensuring that when you do initiate having
the chat, that they're going to be receptive and it's going to be a soft place to land.
So many things that I absolutely adore about everything you've just said there.
Expanding your comfort zone rather than leaping out of it into restless anxiety is so key.
And the open-endedness of those questions, I mean, at worst, what you end up with is an interesting
conversation. And that's actually a wonderful place to be. To get into the practice of having
conversations with someone who hopefully, if they are worthy of you, will end up as your long-term
partner, that in and of itself is a great exercise. The other thing that I like about it is that
we are so often sold this contradictory myth. On the one hand, we need to know who we are and what we want and what we're worth. And we need to stake our claim to it and say, listen, if you're not with the program, then you're out of my life and be this kind of badass Samantha Jones-esque figure. And this goes for someone of any gender. And then on the flip
of that, if you've had any experience of dating emotionally unavailable individuals,
you will be only too aware of the danger of putting them off by being, quote, unquote,
too much or coming on too strong. And so then you get into this situation of game playing
where you avoid saying, where do you see us in two years? You avoid saying, do you see us
going on holiday even? You avoid putting any pressure or any demands on this other
person because they have made it so clear that commitment freaks them out. And yes, I do have
experience of this. Yes, me too. And it's emotional fuckwittage of the highest order.
So the chat. What is the chat? Well, this is something our listeners need to ask themselves,
isn't it? What is it that you want to achieve from the chat? Is it exclusivity? Is it having a very
conventional notion of boyfriend, girlfriend, girlfriend, boyfriend, boyfriend, boyfriend,
or is it something else like an exploration of polyamory?
How would you suggest we determine which of those parameters is important for us?
Right. And that is the starting point, isn't it? Deciding what we want,
because this is all about us as an individual, because you're not really a couple yet.
This is about, as this individual with a sense of self, what does this.
this self-kneed in this relationship. So doing a bit of self-exploration is really important here,
whether that's journaling or talking to a trusted friend or, you know, just meditating on it,
getting clear about what do I want out of this relationship at this phase in my life?
Maybe it is about exploring something new. Maybe it's about expanding your beliefs about
what relationships are. Maybe you get a sense that this partner,
is someone you could explore that with.
So, you know, even if, you know, you spend a bit of time writing a letter to yourself
about this next relationship you go into, self, is going to involve this, these opportunities
for exploration.
You know, maybe it's not the traditional format of a relationship.
But what is important is that you're clear on what you want.
Yes.
Yeah.
And actually, that's something I'd love to talk to you about is that idea of dating
safety and consent and how aware we should be of these topics at this time.
Oh, it's such an important topic, and I'm so glad that you've introduced it here.
It needs to be completely top of mind.
You know, these days we're talking about enthusiastic, continuous consent.
You know, it's so much more than just saying yes.
And I think it's so much more than just in the sexual realm as well.
You know, I think consent to move to the next stage of the relationship is also really important to have some agency over.
But when it comes to the sexual side of consent, I think this is a really important one for listeners to be talking to each other about,
not just with your partner, but with friends and having this conversation,
getting comfortable with the language around consent.
Because we haven't grown up having language around consent.
have we?
No.
Certainly people of, you know, sort of Gen Y and Gen X, yeah.
God help the boomers.
I mean, you know, there was certainly none of it there.
So I think starting to get comfortable with language around, I'm comfortable with this,
I'm not comfortable with this.
And for people who are initiating, are you comfortable with this?
Are you still comfortable with this?
Let's make that language really normal because it can be so sexy.
And that's something new that we need to introduce.
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Exclusivity, that idea of asking someone to be your partner, and let's talk about a sort of conventional relationship where we've decided that actually we're going to be faithful to each other.
I think there's something that feels a bit immature about it.
Yes.
I can remember being in primary school and boys saying to me, were you going to go?
with me, Mel.
You know?
And that was a definitive question with a definitive answer.
And there you go.
There's a line in the sand.
We weren't girlfriend and boyfriend, and now we are.
Right.
So having that conversation as an adult now, for me, feels a little bit like an immature school
child thing to kind of say.
So there's a re-education around that as well.
I have learned a lot from, I'm going to mention a rival reality.
TV program here, Mel, I hope you don't mind, which is Love Island. Yes. I've learnt a lot about how
younger generations conceive of exclusivity and being boyfriend, girlfriend, and how, or girlfriend,
girlfriend, boyfriend, or however you identify, and how many stages there are to it. Right.
Which I'm not used to as a 46-year-old woman. Right. That notion that you can be seeing multiple
people, then you decide that you go exclusive, so you're not seeing other people. Then after that,
you might decide to be in a relationship. Wow. Did you know that? I've not heard that extra
phase in the middle. Yes. Okay. So there's exclusivity that might come before we're in a
relationship. Exactly. Interesting. It's just interesting that I think different age groups or
potentially have different approaches. And so if you are in an age gap relationship, for instance,
Yes. Again, that might have an impact on how it's perceived. And again, that's when you bring
in your mail shilling open-ended questions. Absolutely. All you do what my Gareth did. Can I share
how he, please, signposted that we're moving to the next phase. He demonstrated it for me
behaviourally. And as a behavioural scientist, I really respected this. So we were at lunch.
What he did was he got up from the table, pulled out his phone, made a phone call. And I thought,
What's going on with this guy?
How weird.
We're midway through this lovely lunch.
I'm not into this at all.
Anyway, he came back and he sat down and I said, what was that about?
And he said, oh, I'm just ending it with all the girls that I've been sleeping with.
Oh, my gosh.
And he, I don't know if there really were six or seven, but that's amazing.
The impression that that's what he was doing.
He had gotten to the point where in his mind, he didn't communicate it with me, but in his mind, he got to the point at that lunch where he realized that he only wanted to be in a relationship with me.
That's such a baller move.
Yes.
I guess it was.
Yeah.
Were there any other behavioural changes or that was the main one?
That was the main one.
It was pretty direct and strong and decisive.
Yes.
Yeah.
Did you then have to break off with all of the men you were sleeping with?
No, I wasn't sleeping with anyone.
I'd like to say that I was, but I really wasn't.
No, because that would be gameplay, Mel, so we don't have to do that.
That's it. That's amazing. What a story.
Okay, we've spoken about getting serious and the time frame and what commitment means.
Now let's move on to the second part, which is compatibility.
Yes.
Let's discuss compatibility in all of its facets.
Let's start with the big one.
Let's start with sexual compatibility.
Yes.
I'm very interested in sexual compatibility because I sometimes think that it can obscure the emotional truth
in that I have been sexually compatible with many, many, many partners.
Not that many, with some partners.
And that has made me think that there's more there than there actually is.
And it's one of those things that in those instances, although we never got far along enough the line.
to know, I imagine probably would have fizzled out, but the emotional compatibility wasn't there.
But sometimes I think it can be really confusing. And sometimes like chemistry, as we discussed
in a previous episode, sexual compatibility can build, can't it?
It absolutely can. And I think you make a really good point in that sexual compatibility
can mask deficits in other areas. Have you heard the expression drowning in dick sand?
I think that's what you're talking about.
Narn used to be an expression that I use every single day.
You must take it in a doctor.
Droning and dicks, and I love a pawn as well.
Yes.
Yeah, okay.
That's what it is.
Yes.
And I've definitely seen this with friends.
And I'm sure I've been drowning in it myself
because it can become all encompassing.
And particularly for women, because we have oxytocin, don't we?
It's a lovely hormone.
It helps us bond with friends, and it's the love hormone, it makes us feel good.
But I'm going to say, unfortunately, every time we have an orgasm, we release oxytocin.
And it confuses us because we think that the person who was the object of the orgasm, therefore, needs to be our mate for life.
And is that a female specific thing?
It is.
God, that's annoying.
It's so annoying.
I mean, great, but sometimes.
Great.
If you're in a committed long-term relationship.
But if you're just having sex with someone, that's why it can be so confusing, I think, for many women having casual sex.
Because every time we do it, part of our old lizard brain says, this is your partner for life.
Yes.
Even when it's wildly inappropriate.
Even when you're just drowning in dick sands.
Exactly.
So put yourself out of that dixan.
And of course what we know about quicksand is it's impossible to get out of.
I'm trying to think, I'm wasting a lot of time trying to think about it.
Visualizing it.
Visualizing it, but also trying to think of an equivalent for a vagina, like a vaj badge.
It's probably, like a badge badge.
I just think clitsand.
Clit sand.
Yes.
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is why we pay her the big bucks.
This is Mel Schilling.
Clit sand.
Okay.
So, if sexual, but sexual compatibility, again, how much should it factor into this stage,
into whether we decide to take this forward?
Well, it is part of this.
discussion, if we were to think about all of the data points that we're gathering, so during
the bum-sniffing stage, you are gathering data points about compatibility. One of them
will be your sexual compatibility, because let's be honest, it is one of the long-term ingredients
in a relationship, isn't it? It varies so much from couple to couple, and again, that issue of
pace comes into it as well, you know, depending on each partner's sexual experience and maybe
trauma, they're going to have different paces. So I think, you know, it's really important to be
very open-minded at this phase in terms of how that compatibility is going, because it's still
early days. You know, you may not have established your rhythm yet as a couple, pun intended.
You are still figuring it out. But what I would say at this phase is if there is very little
sexual compatibility, or if you're finding you're not attracted to your partner sexually,
if you're not desiring them on a sexual level, then it's got to start throwing up some pretty
big questions for you about the longevity of this relationship.
I mean, it's not black and white.
You know, I'm not saying that there has to be sexual chemistry in order for the relationship
to go the distance, because as we know, some relationships have very minimal sexual
elements to them or none at all. So again, it's going to come back to that personal
preference. What do I need? What do I need in this relationship in order for it to be
satisfying for me? And some people also might not feel amazingly sexually compatible with their
partner, but want a partnership and look for sexual compatibility outside of that
partnership with the full consent of both individuals. And I wonder if we
could talk a little bit about conversation. Do you think at these relatively early stages,
sexual compatibility should be part of our conversation? Yes. Okay, because as a repressed British
person, that sounds really awkward to me. Let me be the Aussian takeover here because yes,
yes, yes, we do need to talk about sex because one of the sexiest organs we have is our
brain. Absolutely. And this is where you can start establishing.
a greater depth of sexual compatibility and just sexual enjoyment is through talking about it.
You know, whether that's talking about the things you'd like to do together, whether it's
talking about your sexual history, your ideas about, you know, where you could potentially
take things. These are the building blocks of a really good, sustainable sexual relationship.
If it's just physical and it's just what physically happens in the bedroom and then you never
talk about it outside of that, then there's really nowhere for it to go. How's it going to
grow? You know, I think you've got to add fuel to that fire and the way to do that is through
conversation. And I think if you start it earlier, it becomes easier than for that just to be
integrated into your relationship longer term. So again, is there an open-ended conversational
question that we could use in this scenario? Absolutely. And this is a great place to use those
open questions, you know, I mean, let's say you're starting to get comfortable with this
person and you're thinking, you know, I'd like to do more. What if you ask them something like,
tell me about your most exciting sexual fantasy? Great. Okay. Now, we spoke a little bit about
exclusivity and because we're talking about sexual compatibility now, I wonder if we can bring in
micro cheating because we're all aware if we've had a clear conversation with someone who we want to
be our romantic partner about what our boundaries are and one of those boundaries is I don't want
you to have sex with other people. That's a clear one. Sure. What is micro cheating? So micro cheating
are those small seemingly insignificant behaviours that are based on deception. And so deception is
the key here. The behaviour itself, not necessarily.
But it's when you're doing things in secret that you wouldn't want your partner to know about.
So some examples that I've seen are saving somebody else's name in your phone under a pseudonym
because the idea of your partner seeing that person's text pop up on your phone would be uncomfortable.
That's a sign.
Or not telling your partner who you're following on social media, not showing them, for example,
because you maybe want to have some private chats with someone.
You need to ask yourself the question,
why don't you want your partner to see this?
So it's not the act of who you're following, that's fine.
But the fact that you're wanting to conceal that from your partner.
So this is really about a little bit of emotional cheating, you could say,
but really what it comes back to at its essence is the deception.
By the way, before we start to recording, Mel casually said that she is credited with inventing the term micro-cheating.
Yes.
So we're extremely thrilled to have the originator of that term in the studio with us.
I think that's so interesting because there could be two things going on.
One is that you are concealing things from your partner because you want to pursue some sort of illicit flirtation.
The other is that your partner has unrealistic or jealous.
or borderline dangerous tendencies
to want to monitor everything that you're doing.
So either way, the concealment is a red flag.
Right.
And that's a really good point.
Why are you concealing it?
Is it about you or is it about them?
Let's talk about the more emotional sense of compatibility,
shared life goals and values,
and also a bit of the practicality here,
where do you want to live, how do you want to live,
Again, these are crucial, I would imagine, at this stage.
Oh, yeah.
I think of compatibility with three prongs, and I know you love a three-point discussion.
Values, lifestyle preferences, and deal breakers.
Great.
So if we start with values, and I know we've talked about values a lot in this podcast,
because it's so critical.
In fact, all of the research says that one of the highest predictors of compatibility is shared values.
Your values are really what gets you out of bed in the morning, and they're the things that
define what a good life means to you.
So let's say for you, a good life is all about health and fitness, and let's say for me,
it's about being active and being adventurous, then those are going to go really well together.
But let's say your highest value is family, and let's say mine is freedom.
they may or may not go too well together, depending on how they're going to be enacted.
So that's why this next layer becomes really important, which is lifestyle preferences,
which are really values in action, how you actually behave on a day-to-day basis to move toward
the living of those values.
And really, that's what, you know, a good life is all about, you know, being aligned with your
values, being able to get up in the morning and say to yourself,
the things that are really, really important to me today are going to drive how I behave,
what I say and do and the decisions I make.
So when you can find a partner who has similar things that drive them to get out of bed
in the morning and that drive them to want to actually take decisions and action in their life,
then you're going to be moving towards similar things and you're going to have that synergy.
And then the deal breakers, that's just something for.
you to work out. Deal breakers, I think, need to come back to values. A genuine deal breaker
is really something that would be against your values. Yes. Not whether someone's a petite
brunette. Exactly. Note to every single male maths contestant. Exactly. Exactly. It would be
more like someone who disrespects others. There's your deal breaker. Values, lifestyle. Love that
idea of lifestyle preferences being values in action and deal breakers. So good, Mel.
Hit pause on whatever you're listening to and hit play on your next adventure. This fall get
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Oh, hi, buddy. Who's the best? You are? I wish I could spend all day with you instead.
Uh, Dave, you're off mute.
Hey, happens to the best of us. Enjoy some goldfish cheddar crackers. Goldfish have short memories. Be like goldfish.
From one tripartite structure to the next, the third part of this episode is dealing with
their past and your future. And what we mean by that is the emotional character that has been
shaped by your partner's past and what they bring into the relationship. A less kind way of
saying it is emotional baggage. Yes. And particularly if you are a slightly older data and I would
put myself in that category, there are varying degrees of emotional consideration to bring into play
here. I, for instance, am a stepmother of three, and that was something that I really, really
had to consider carefully, because it is such a complicated, and yes, unbelievably rewarding and
fulfilling relationship, but I think that's something that one has to consider. And then there's
also their past relationships. I historically have been a jealous person and I know that that
came from my own insecurity. But how do we deal with any kind of jealousy that might surround
our partner's past? You know what? When things rear their ugly head like jealousy,
you can either take action that will push your partner away from you or bring them closer.
So, you know, I think we've all done those behaviours that push our partner away when we feel jealous.
You know, a very natural way to respond is to become clingy or to get defensive or to get naqy about, you know, previous partners.
But there are things that you can do that will bring them closer.
And that is opening up, exploring what your fear is with your partner and being vulnerable.
And that's the harder road to take
Because it really takes some guts to open up like that
But being able to say to your partner
I'm actually feeling a little bit fragile at the moment
I know this is irrational
But I feel some fear with you relating to that person
It makes me feel jealous
And I don't like that that's coming up for me
That is so good, Mel
I've never done it
don't praise me
that is such a good phrase to you
yes have you ever felt jealous then
I'm not a jealous person
you're just the perfect woman
genuinely I'm sorry
I don't and I've got to say that
my Gareth doesn't experience jealousy either
you know generally speaking we are both
I guess we're both quite securely attached
you know to talk about attachment theory again
but I think early in our
relationship, it did show its head. But as, you know, the relationship has progressed,
it's taken a while to get there, but that's where we are now. Yeah, I think that's a really
important thing to make clear is that hopefully this relationship that you find yourself in is
going to grow and you are going to spend time together. And actually, the more that you know
each other, the more secure you will feel because you are asking these lovely open-ended questions
that Mel has given you the vocabulary for and you are having these interoperable.
conversations, and that develops security and safety and all of the good stuff. And I also
want to say that sometimes jealousy can be so toxic that you just don't even want to go there.
But it's important to understand how the person you're with has been shaped and what their
hopes and fears were and what their values are because of what they've learned from past
relationships. So I also wanted to say that to any listener who's struggling with it right
now, it won't always be this way. Yes. And it is important to be able to sit together and
examine those past lives. You know, it is really important. But it doesn't have to happen
at this point. And I think buying a bit of time, that's really wise and shows real self-awareness.
And I think for our listeners to take that on board is really important. You know, there's no
rule that says you have to open up your baggage and show what's inside straight away.
But a bit of meta-communication, so that is communicating about your communication can be
really helpful here. So maybe saying to your partner, there's lots that I'd love to talk
to you about when I'm ready at the moment, but I look forward to a time when we can do that
together. Oh, okay, and also just on that note, because I know we touched on co-parenting,
A similar sort of thing, if you're in a situation right now where you're deciding whether to take it to the next level with someone who has children, or maybe you have children in this scenario, I actually think the wisest course of action is to work out what your relationship is, just the two of you first.
And for me and Justin, that was six months.
It was six months before I met his kids.
And that was appropriate for us.
You know, they're the most important people in my partner's life.
So we need to know where we stand before we bring them in.
And so I think that's another thing just to bear in mind that you don't have to have all of the answers at once.
You just need to be willing to try and to be open to what might come at this particular stage.
Yes, and I think there can be a bit of a chicken and egg situation here.
Do I introduce my partner to my kids in order to,
ascertain whether I want the long-term relationship with him or her, or do I have the chat
with my partner to establish that it's a long-term relationship before I introduce them to my
kids? And that's a very personal decision. Yes. Okay, well, goodness, we didn't need a guest
today, did we? We've only just got started. We're not at the end already, are we? We are at the end
already? Oh my gosh. But not of the pod class and not of the relationship. Good. Because
next episode, well actually next episode we're dealing with rejection and heartbreak. So we are
dealing with endings next episode, but in a really healthy way. And I know that it's something
that a lot of people will be turning to this pod class four because it's one of the hardest,
hardest things. But we're going to help you through it. So rejection and heartbreak is next week.
And Mel, let's leave our listeners with one of your wonderful exercises. What would you like
to do this week? Well, this little activity is going to walk you through your values, your lifestyle
preferences and your deal breakers. And by going through this activity, it'll help you get real
clarity about whether this is a relationship that you're wanting to take to the next level.
Use it as a bit like a checklist. What you're going to do is identify your own values and your
partner's values and the degree to which you think they are aligned. So, for example, if your highest
value is honesty and your partner's highest value is integrity, then those are probably quite
nicely aligned. And what does it mean if you have very different high values? What if one person's
is family and the others is freedom? What does that mean? So this will just help get real clarity
as a starting point for this discussion. Because remember, the aim here is to have shared values or
compatible values. Then the next piece is the lifestyle preferences. So this is the way you like
to live your values, if you like. Really looking at the alignment between the way your partner
lives their life and the way you live yours. Where are the similarities? Where are the
differences? Where are the gaps? And also where are the opportunities for growth for both of you
in there. And then finally, the deal breakers. I mean, obviously where there are real clashes of values,
This is where you need to have a serious conversation with yourself, firstly, about is this something you can tolerate or even want in your relationship?
And if so, how are you going to make that work?
Fantastic.
This week has been an absolute joy.
I've loved learning from you yet again, Mel.
I wish I'd had you in the early days of every single relationship I've ever been in.
You could have been a really functional thruple.
No point in having regrets.
We can still do it now.
you heard it here first listeners how to date is proudly sponsored by morrison's mel and i are on a mission
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That's all we ask. You can go and sign up at the podclass.com.com. P-O-D-C-L-A-S-S dot co.uk.
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